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The latest Rasmussen poll of likely voters shows that, by a margin of 20 percentage points (56 to 36 percent), Americans support the repeal of Obamacare. This marks the first time since the spring of 2010, shortly after Obamacare’s passage, that 3-straight Rasmussen polls have shown at least 20-point margins in favor of repeal.

According to the latest poll, independents favor repeal by a margin of 21 percentage points (53 to 32 percent), with 40 percent of independents “strongly” favoring repeal and only 22 percent “strongly” opposing it. And by a margin of more than 2-to-1, independents think Obamacare would be “bad” (54 percent), rather than “good” (26 percent), for the country.

Repeal would prevent Obamacare’s massive expansion of Medicaid. It would prevent nearly $1 trillion (from 2014 to 2023) from being siphoned out of Medicare and spent on Obamacare. It would prevent Americans from being forced to buy government-approved health insurance under penalty of law and being forced to live under jaw-dropping levels of consolidated and centralized control.

But it can’t happen until a different occupant moves into the White House.